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Biophysical, Acupressure, Magnetic Therapy
The SnorEnder - a uniquely effective snoring relief system - is the world's only snoring relief solution with our unique AcuSleep feature that actually helps reduce or even stop your nightly snoring in three (3) ways:
- Advanced Biophysical Mouth, Chin & Jaw Support - Scientifically engineered to help keep your mouth closed during sleep. Sleep experts say that more than 85% of snoring is due to open-mouth breathing during sleep. Keep the mouth closed properly and most non-apnea snoring is reduced or even stops!
- Gentle, Proven Acupressure Relief - proven by more than 2,000 years of study and use in the Orient, accepted by US and European medical societies. May promote wellness and stress relief to help you sleep.*
- Powerful Magnetic Therapy - the same advanced healthcare technology that's used by millions of active people around the world, including athletes & sports celebrities. May promote well-being.*
The SnorEnder really CAN help you reduce or even stop most chronic, habitual, LOUD non-apnea snoring the very first night you use it. More than 98% of those who have purchased the SnorEnder over the past four years continue to use it long after the ONE-YEAR Money Back Guarantee time period. Why?
Because it really does help reduce their open-mouth snoring. They sleep better, lose weight faster (and keep it off longer), have more energy, and so does their spouse. Isn't THAT what you're looking for? It can also help CPAP wearers get more comfort and benefit from their device.
You can PROVE for yourself that the SnorEnder will help reduce or even stop your open-mouth snoring right now - simply take the Nose Test before you buy!
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Who Uses the SnorEnder?
People like you. People who snore. People who try to sleep with someone who snores. Frustrated people who have tried lots of anti-snoring remedies, but still snore loudly almost every night. People who lie awake tired and angry night after sleepless night next to someone who snores LOUDLY.
If what you're doing now to try and stop the snoring just isn't working for you, it's time for the SnorEnder. The SnorEnder may be just what you need to finally get a quiet, restful night's sleep. Just read what a few of our many satisfied customers have told us...
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CPAP USERS
So many CPAP users struggle with the problems that come from "mouth breathing" while they wear their mask. Dry mouth, sore throats, more frequent colds and flu, nasal stuffiness, daytime fatigue and "fuzzyheadedness" - all these problems may be affected by the very common problem of breathing through your mouth while using a CPAP system. The SnorEnder can help you wear your CPAP mask more comfortably and with better results. It is a better solution for open-mouth breathing for CPAP users than chin strips, chin straps, mouthguards or even taping your mouth shut because it:
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Simply works! AND it's COMFORTABLE
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Costs a lot less than chin and nose strips (over a year, you can spend more than $300 for those boxes of chin & nose strips!)
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Costs no more than the "best" chin straps (and you really don't want the cheap ones!) - and no chin strap has the SnorEnder's unique AcuSleep features
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Stays on your head and remains effective when you move around while you sleep, unlike chin straps that usually slip off as soon as you move during sleep.
The SnorEnder can help you keep your mouth closed while you sleep. Wearing it with your CPAP can help reduce your mouth breathing and may help you get more comfort and benefit from your CPAP.
If you use a CPAP, you need a SnorEnder too!
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Your SnorEnder isn't made in some offshore factory. Each one is carefully hand-crafted here in the USA by the team that invented it. That's why we stand behind what we make and sell. By the way, we don't just sell a product. This web site has a lot of information about snoring. We hope that you find it useful.
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What Our Customers Say!
You can read a few of our many customer testimonials. Here's one we received a few years ago, and the customer enthusiastically gave us permission to publish the letter and name:
"I have been put on some heavy duty medicines for trigeminal neuralgia. I have been a snorer because I am a mouth breather for as long as I can remember but not so bad that my husband had to sleep in the other room. But when I began taking the medicine, he told me that the snoring was awful.
After trying all the usual stuff, I seached the web and found the SnorEnder web site. I ordered the small size of the SnorEnder Pro not realizing I could custom fit it.* I received the item in an amazingly short time. I began using it. My husband came back to our bed. He said it was much better, but I felt the item was not holding my jaw as well as I thought it would. I asked (SnorEnder) what steps I could take to get a better fit.
I was told to take a string measurement and send it to them and they would make a custom fit for me at no extra charge. I was shocked!!!! I know of only one other company I have dealt with over the years that has ever offered to do something like that. I now have the custom one and it is working great. This company is fabulous and the product is also."
Carol F. Kirkland, WA
April 27, 2005
(Update: she's still using her custom SnorEnder,
after more than 3 years!)
 
We accept PayPal, Visa, MasterCard,
American Express and Discover Cards
YES, DOCTORS REALLY DO USE
the SnorEnder!
Doctors and many other healthcare professionals now use the new SnorEnder to reduce or even stop their own snoring. Medical professionals, including MD's, DO's, nurses, chiropractors, and even dentists have ordered the new SnorEnder.
These are medical professionals who don't have the symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea. Why? Because they KNOW how important a good, quiet night's sleep is. They have ordered the SnorEnder because they need a consistent, effective solution for their own snoring. And because it really does help them stop their own loud snoring, they are telling their patients and friends about it too!
More than 98% of those who try the SnorEnder are satisfied customers. They keep on using the SnorEnder night after quiet, restful night because it helps them. Take the simple NOSE TEST, and prove that it can work for you too!

More Than
98.8%
Are Satisfied
Customers
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SnorEnder & Newsweek
("tired & true snoring remedies are best...?)
Donald Trump is right. There is no such thing as "bad" publicity. Newsweek published a Web-only article on March 21, 2008, characterizing the SnorEnder as one of "The Six Wackiest Snoring 'Fixes.' While we're pleased that Newsweek actually managed to discover the SnorEnder website, the article devoted to snoring "fixes" seemed to miss the mark, entirely. We'd like to point out a few of the errors Newsweek made.
The article's author, Tina Peng, tried to get off to a good start, mentioning the pain and suffering that snoring causes within relationships and in its health impacts. But, things soon began to fall apart. After ridiculing the SnorEnder (without ever trying it or even contacting us) and broadsiding a few other admittedly unconventional products, she dismisses these snoring relief approaches as little more than wacky frauds and concludes with the following statement:
"The medically recommended at-home remedies aren't as exciting, but they are tried and true. They include: avoiding big meals, avoiding sedating drugs and alcohol before bed, maintaining a healthy weight, treating allergies and colds and of course sleeping on your side. (For that, the trusty tennis ball might just work.) Experts say that if snoring is a consistent problem, you should talk to your doctor. There are serious health risks related to both snoring and a more severe form of the condition called sleep apnea."
The problem with this advice is that even though it may be "medically recommended" and "tried" - it is NOT true.
At least not true in the sense of "does it actually work consistently and reliably?" Like us, like millions of other snorers who do not have sleep apnea, you've probably also tried the "tried & true" remedies. Everybody knows about them, we've all tried them. They don't work. Period.
They. Don't. Work. If they did, you, us, and millions of other snorers would not be snoring, would you? But, you are...
While being overweight is one of several risk factors for Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA), it's simply not true that "losing weight" will help you stop snoring. Losing those extra pounds is almost always a good idea, but as a snoring 'cure,' it's just another simplistic piece of worthless advice-what your doctor might tell you when s/he can't come up with a more effective solution to your snoring problem. There are more than a few thin snorers and we probably all know someone who's a little overweight and doesn't snore.
Taking care of colds and nasal problems is an obvious thing to do. What it really means is that you "should" breathe through your nose while asleep. No mention of how to help ensure that (for starters, use a neti pot). But, if your mouth is open during sleep, the path of least resistance will likely be followed - you WILL breathe through your mouth, and you WILL snore. Another couple of "tried & true" myths busted.
Sleeping on your side works for many. The problem is, of course, staying on your side. Almost everyone moves around during sleep. And the tennis ball trick was first patented in 1908 (and possibly sold much earlier). It didn't work back then; it still doesn't work. So, yet another "tried & true" solution bites the dust.
Sleep Apnea
Experts do say that if snoring is a consistent problem, you should talk to your doctor. Absolutely! Sleep apnea IS a very serious, potentially fatal sleep disorder and if you snore loudly and frequently, please get tested for Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) right away! Most insurance plans cover it, If your's doesn't, it should - testing isn't cheap.
However, the author's implication (intentional or not) here seems to be that most snorers either have OSA or are very probably at serious risk of developing it. That is an assumption. It may possibly be true (doubtful), but so far, there is little convincing evidence that such a relationship can scientifically be established - that most snorers have or will develop OSA because they snore. If you snore loudly and frequently, get OSA tested. Most of us just snore, although as we live beyond our senior years and into old age, it's likely that more snorers will develop some form of sleep disorder, including OSA.
In point of fact, a recent University of Wisconsin study found that 72% of participants followed over an 18 year period did NOT have sleep apnea. Even though many, perhaps most, of them just snore. 24% had some mild sleep disorder or other sleep condition. Only 4% had OSA. Only 4%...
Snoring & OSA
Equating habitual snoring with sleep apnea as the article seems to do here: "There are serious health risks related to both snoring and a more severe form of the condition called sleep apnea" - is factually an over-simplification of a complex problem. Something that the media does too often.
Sleep apnea (OSA) IS a serious medical condition and snoring IS a common symptom of OSA. Sleep apnea IS NOT merely a "more serious form of the condition (snoring)..." Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a far more dangerous, complex and difficult-to-treat condition that can only be diagnosed by a healthcare professional (and never self-treated). Visit www.sleepapnea.org for more information.
The Bottom Line
So, while we do appreciate Newsweek's coverage of snoring and the SnorEnder (it's always nice to be noticed, and we got lots of new sales after the article was published), the author simply got a number of things wrong because she tried to be (1) funny, (2) informative, and (3) factual. She missed on all three. Some advice: when writing about unconventional topics, it's often better to do a lot more in-depth and objective research. For example, what we have learned from more than five years of intensive research is this:
Tried & true snoring remedies aren't - true or effective. Snoring is anything but simple. It describes whole familes of sleep issues, disorders and diseases. And, snoring is not always the same as having a serious sleep disorder (but saying so could mean that we're all probably going to have an opportunity to buy a lot more expensive breathing machines, cleverly-named drugs, and invasive treatments).
But, let's give Newsweek some credit. The hour or two of Google research the author invested gave her what she needed - an over-simplified, factually incomplete, and amusing little puff piece that unfortunately adds little information and merely reinf |